Slashdot Mirror


Internet Connectivity Outside of the United States

Ant writes "A Yahoo! news story says that nearly 60 publications in countries bear the PC World name, or are associated with it in some way. The editors at several of them were asked to report how their readers get online. Not surprisingly, the report indicates that many countries are substantially ahead of the United States in online access." From the article: "For example, in the United Kingdom, you can buy DSL service with a download speed of up to 24 megabits per second. In Denmark, some people have fiber-optic connections as fast as 100 mbps. And in Italy and Spain, broadband service is cheap, and dial-up service is free (except for the cost of the local call). Still, many countries have their own connection quirks ..."

10 of 504 comments (clear)

  1. Superiority of the Free Market. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As any libertarian will tell you, government regulation and meddling in a market can only hurt consumers.

    It's for this reason that the United States, with fewer government controls has a superior and chepaer broadband, telecoms network...oh what? Crap.

    Turns out for some things regulation is better - look at how a poor country like Cuba has better healthcare (with lower infant mortality rates) than the wealthy US.

    Oh, and I note they don't have sweden on the list where (last I heard) you could get 100Mbps for something like 30 euros/month in a large city.

    --
    There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    1. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hate to break this to you but the FCC has massive controls over things like DSL. The reason that DSL/fibre has lagged in the US while cable surged ahead was because of the FCC. The FCC REQUIRED the phone companies to lease thier equipment at a loss to competitors. Guess what? The phone companies decided it didn't make sense to lose money so they didn't install the equipment.

              The FCC was more interested in lining the pocket of the small companies that would provide "competition". At the same time they let the cable companies do whatever they wanted.

          The dream team that runs the FCC ignored the simple fact that real competition requires people competing not leaching off the work of others. They ignored that internet connection is an internet connection. Competition isn't between DSL providers but between ALL internet providers. DSL,Cable,wireless etc.

          Finally a few years back the FCC changed the rules. No longer requiring the Baby Bells to lease all equipment. Suddenly the phone companies started competing with the cable companies. For the consumers this was a good thing.

    2. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A: Higher population density

      I can't believe how often this is used as a legitimate justification for the US's crap broadband.

      Manhattan island is one of the most densely populated parts of the world. And Broadband is still expensive and slow. If population desnsity is the problem, why does this happen?

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    3. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by fitten · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's also a matter of pure area. The USA is just over 22x the size of Sweden, for example, in both land area and population. In fact, the USA is larger than all of Europe put together. Europe, as a whole, has a much higher population density than the USA. I imagine that Sweden's population is highly concentrated around the southern portion of the country with it being very sparsely populated to the north, and then typically in isolated pockets of towns. How many people who live in Sweden do not live in a large city? Wikipedia link Coincidentally, large cities are much more apt to have the infrastructure and market to install higher speed networks. The 15th largest city in Sweden has about 100,000 people living in it. The 10th largest city in the USA is larger than the 1st largest in Sweden. I'm not throwing rocks, just pointing out facts and how/why it may be easier to give most of the people in Sweden better Internet access than most of the people in the USA.

    4. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The reason that DSL/fibre has lagged in the US while cable surged ahead was because of the FCC. The FCC REQUIRED the phone companies to lease thier equipment at a loss to competitors. Guess what? The phone companies decided it didn't make sense to lose money so they didn't install the equipment.

      Horseshit. The government required the incumbent local exchange carrier to lease their lines to the competition because the government subsidized its installation to begin with. Having multiple line providers in most areas simply isn't practical because 97% of the U.S. by area is rural with very low population density.

      Further, despite the fact that the required line leasing for ILECs ensures availability of those lines for low prices to the competitors, most of those competitors STILL don't compete in rural markets, and without competition, the telcos have zero incentive to improve their offerings. More to the point, the fact that they don't compete means that the leasing requirement has had no effect on fiber in those areas.

      Finally, the telcos want to compete with cable and want to be able to provide TV services. They can only do this via fiber. Thus, in markets where fiber will pay for itself through cable subscriptions, the telcos will put in fiber regardless of line leasing rules. In areas where the human density is low enough that a competing cable company couldn't survive (97% of the U..S. by area), though, they still won't do it because the telcos don't see any real advantage to simply providing more bandwidth unless they will lose users to another service that is faster.

      The line leasing rules forced competition to be possible in markets where it would simply never have existed were it not for those rules. The only reason ISPs have improved their speeds at all has been in response to threats from competitors, including those leased line services. If the FCC had not put in rules that required ILECs to require them to lease their lines, in markets where the cable company doesn't provide service, there wouldn't be ANY competition in the market. Many would would still be paying $50/month for 128k/64kbps down.

      The dream team that runs the FCC ignored the simple fact that real competition requires people competing not leaching off the work of others. They ignored that internet connection is an internet connection. Competition isn't between DSL providers but between ALL internet providers. DSL,Cable,wireless etc.

      Satellite internet is a joke (minimum half second round trip packet latency due to the laws of physics). Wireless is only practical in large cities with high population density. BPL hasn't been approved for general roll-out. So in your ideal world of "competition", consumers would have two options: the telephone company (note that there is not enough human density to have more than one) and the cable company (and again, not enough density to support a second cable company). Explain how a duopoly exhibiting a Nash equilibrium is competition.

      Short of government intervention forcing the issue, the only thing that will cause consumers to see better internet service is the introduction of a disruptive force. That means adding new competitors. As has been repeatedly shown, this is not possible if the customers must lay down a wire infrastructure because this is unprofitable in the vast majority of cases even when viewed over a relatively long term (>20 years) period. As such, short of a new, disruptive tech like BPL, there is no incentive for corporate-sponsored telcos to compete in the U.S..

      Finally, note that for the purposes of comparison, Europe has a population density comparable to America's average cities even when you look at the entire countries in Europe as a whole. Competition is possible there where it is not practical in the U.S. Therefore, by definition, you cannot use Europe as a model for understanding U.S. telcos. The mere fact that a free market will work in a high population density ar

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    5. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by julesh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, but conversely it is much easier to provide such services to major US cities than it is to most European cities, because US cities tend to have a higher population density.

      So how do internet access services in, say, Birmingham (3739 people per square kilometre) compare to, say, Philadelpha (4,208 per square kilometre)? The 24 megabit broadband described in TFA is available cheaply in most of Birmingham. How about Philadelphia?

    6. Re:Superiority of the Free Market. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No...no..no ...wrong. Your simplistic approach is laughable. You are like the Swedes who always talk about how much "free" stuff they have...and this goes right along with that. take a look at how much they pay in tax...starting with that lovely little 90% + inheritance tax.

      You're the one making unwarranted assumptions here. Sure the Swedes pay more in taxes, but they provide less in subsidies to Telia and the other local telecoms than the US does. The US has spent billions of our tax dollars laying fiber then selling it off for pennies on the dollar to telecom companies in the US. More importantly, since Sweden is one of the companies with very open records it has repeatedly been used in studies and comparisons as an example case, providing piles of data showing that Swedish telecom providers are collecting much smaller margins than their American counterparts with local monopolies.

      In this particular instance, Sweden's policies of subsidies to benefit the people are a lot more effective and beneficial than the US's policy of subsidies to big companies who are likewise empowered by the state to gouge citizens. The Swedes have cheap, high speed access and less money from each citizen is spent subsidizing it than is spent for each US citizen.

      I'll take our capitalist system over any of their socialist ones any day.

      Every nation on the planet has an economy that is a mix of socialism, capitalism, and communism, the US included. If you want to see the sweet spot for the best mixture, take a look at where the quality of living is the highest.

      Socialism creates worse people time and time again.

      The number one, most effective correlation we can draw with violent crime is income disparity. Socialism, especially inheritance tax is simply mitigating income disparity. Strangely enough when everyone starts out life with more similar amounts of money and no one is born into extreme wealth people are less likely to feel justified in using violence to redress that imbalance. Further, since so few people start out life moving into huge amounts of debt they must borrow from those born wealthy, they are less desperate and less likely to take extreme actions. Sweden, like most countries with a slightly higher rate of socialism, better directed socialism, and without a long established, wealthy ruling class has but a tiny fraction of the violent crime in the US.

      I'd say that argues against your absurd assertion that socialism makes for "bad people."

      ...we have way too many socialist ideas in our govt/society as it is...but then again maybe I just feel that way because I busted my ass to be as successful as I am today.

      Good for you, but a whole lot of people work really hard. Statistically, that is not the path to success in the US. Being born wealthy is the path to success. For every dollar you earned working hard, inventing new things, or making the right moves, some person in the top 1% wealth class makes 1 million bucks by doing nothing but letting the banks use his money to gouge those who started with nothing. Every time someone invents a great new invention and makes a million dollars, a hundred other people who did nothing but be born rich made 10 million each funding the development and distribution of that invention.

      I suggest you look at the wealth disparity in the US and the condensation of wealth principal before you start badmouthing large inheritance taxes. Without them you end up in the same boat as many nations like the US, where a tiny percentage of the population controls more than half the wealth and gets rich by making everyone else borrow it. These systems usually end in an abrupt revolution where the poor kill the rich, redistribute the wealth, and the cycle starts anew. Unless the US reforms its misuse and underuse of socialism, some day you or your descendants will either be the elite being killed or the poor and desperate reduced to near slavery, despite your abilities and hard work.

  2. Re:In defense... by clickclickdrone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There was a story either on TWiT or Digg recently that noted that the US providors had been given tax breaks and so on to the tune of several hundreds of billions to ensure they provided fast internet access for all. They had failed to meet all the requirements and deadlines but naturally got to keep the money.

    --
    I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
  3. Density by Henriok · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The market in Sweden is not that regulated and we could tell you that it's the former State Monopoly that holdning the brakes. They are refusing access to telephone stations, they are keeping the prices up, they are the last to implement just about anything (cable, dsl, wireless, fibre, GSM, 3G, and so forth). They are more expensive and offer less flexible terms. The only redeeming factor is that they are large, and have much larger coverage of the population.. They still have monopoly to "the last mile" out in the less densly populated areas, and in the suburbs of the larger cities, and the adoption of broadband are considerably slower in these areas. This would seem quite strange since it's wehere the richest people live and those in the most need of fast Internet access, but it's due to the fact that independant companies doesn't have access to this market, the former Monopoly does.

    However.. I must say, after RTFA that Sweden is _miles_ ahead of most countries, even our close naighbours, Denmark and Norway. I would've guessed that they would have been in front of us, but they're not. I cant say why really. We've had some pretty vocal individuals/visionaries in the late 90s who really have set the stnadard of the market an made policy. 100 Mbps for everyone is the goal. Perhaps this was a necessity?

    --

    - Henrik

    - when the Shadows descend -
  4. Re:Am I the only one... by JustNiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You think the UK or Europe is lacking in cultural diversity? wow are you misguided.